5

kampf More egg for Apple’s face: for 24 hours, a Spanish e-book edition of Adolf Hitler’s book Mein Kampf appeared in the Apple Store—complete with swastika. Someone (Apple or the publisher) hastily pulled it down once bloggers called attention to it, but it is just another in a long line of strange decisions that are making people wonder just what Apple’s app store reviewers are doing over there.

The issue from my perspective is not whether an e-book of Mein Kampf should be allowed. In the United States, freedom of speech is an important part of our Constitution, even if it’s not speech we like—and more importantly, this book should be kept available as an example of true evil so we know what kinds of things to guard against. (In fact, you can find it in a number of places even now, including Project Gutenberg.)

In fact, the issue is that Apple serves as a gatekeeper for its store, filtering out controversial applications (such as an e-book reader that could download the Kama Sutra from Project Gutenberg). They certainly have the right to do so; it is their store, after all.

But if they are going to enforce standards of decency, they should at least enforce them consistently. Things like this keep on slipping by them. As TechCrunch put it, “If the Nazi logo didn’t raise a red flag, I’m not sure what will."

On the other hand, there are only 40 employees to review the thousands upon thousands of applications Apple receives. With so little manpower, perhaps the occasional lapse should not be surprising.

 
5